Author’s notes: Thanks to all who have read and/or reviewed Part
One. If you haven’t, it might be a good idea to do so. In what I write
below, I am vaguely basing dates and events on my own combination of the movie
and the original comics. The date I use for Hellboy’s ‘birthday’ derives from
the original comics—for some odd reason the movie uses another date. The placing
of other significant events in the life of Hellboy on his birthday is my own
adaptation of backstory material.

Chapter Six: Liz Sherman

Fear of Fire: A Tale of Trust and Love—Part Two

Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense
Adjunct Headquarters, Newark, New Jersey
Thursday, December 24, 2178

Hellboy paced nervously in the large room that had been converted into an
office for his personal use when visiting the facility that at one time had been
the place he called home. This room opened onto another slightly smaller room
that contained his sleeping quarters and bath facilities. It was still quite
early in the morning; he had not slept well the night before and was still
wearing nothing more than the black shorts he usually dressed in when first
getting out of bed.

Except for his partnership with Abraham Sapien, Hellboy had suppressed many
memories connected to his past life in Newark. The unexpected reminder, on the
previous morning, of the personal importance of that day had shaken his ability
to block some of the more significant of these memories.

December 23rd was the day the infant Hellboy first appeared in 1944. Trevor
Broom always looked upon this as Hellboy’s ‘birthday’ and thought the proximity
to Christmas Eve of special significance. For almost sixty years, this was a
time of special sharing between father and son. Others were eventually drawn
into this sharing—especially Abe Sapien and Liz Sherman.

Hellboy’s birthday also marked other significant events connected to Liz. It
was on this day in 1986 when he first met the eleven-year-old ‘Lizzie’. And it
was on this same day eighteen years later that Elizabeth Anne Sherman agreed to
marry the personage officially known as ‘Trevor Bruttenholm, III’ on his
baptismal and marriage certificates.

Liz passed away on December 23rd in the year 2078, after almost seventy-four
years of marriage. Unfortunately, the memory of her death tainted what had once
been such a special time for him.

After Liz’s death, Hellboy found it difficult to allow himself to ever become
that close to anyone again. He may have had occasional one-night stands or
weekend flings with attractive and willing women; yet, these encounters never
even came close to developing into anything long-term. In fact, the only lasting
relationships he allowed into his life were with the Bureau agents and other
government employees he worked with; but, even with these colleagues, he kept a
friendly distance.

Continuing his nervous pacing, Hellboy sighed. As long as Abe had still been
around him, he could sense a vague, yet unshakable, connection to his past.
Abe’s recent departure from the Bureau left him feeling completely adrift,
without anchor or support.

Coming not long after this new bereavement, the unexpected encounter with the
young Trevor Carlton had disturbed Hellboy. He felt an immediate attraction to
the youth and not merely because of Trevor’s connection to his past. It was
almost as if he was being given another chance to again allow someone to become
intimately close to him; and this frightened him more than he liked to admit.

Finally stopping his interminable pacing, Hellboy shook his head. “It doesn’t
do to get too attached,” he mumbled to himself, “I’m just setting myself up to
get hurt again.”

Passing back into his sleeping quarters, Hellboy slipped off the shorts;
eventually donning black leather pants, tee shirt, and work boots. Regardless of
shifts in styles, this had always been his ‘uniform’ of choice over the
centuries. The only changes being that the leather and cotton were now
synthetically replicated and the boots were much easier to fasten one-handed
than his original boots.

Forgoing his usual humongous breakfast, Hellboy decided to depart his office
and meander through the various maze-like corridors that comprised the
underground portion of the Newark Bureau facility. They were not as heavily
populated as they once had been before the main Bureau headquarters transferred
to Washington, D.C. As Hellboy made his slow way into a now seldom-visited
Section 51, the few people located there greeted him with thinly veiled
surprise.

The only resource in Section 51 that was still in use was the collection of
tomes and reference works housed in what had once been Trevor Broom’s office.
Since Hellboy never found himself amenable either to research or to much
reading, even for pleasure, he seldom made use of this vast library.

Outside of the life-sized wooden sculpture of Michael the Archangel slaying
Satan, many of the relics and artifacts once located in the library and the
corridors outside of it had been relocated to Washington, D.C. They were now to
be found within the Smithsonian Institution in a pavilion that had been
dedicated as The Professor Trevor Bruttenholm Memorial Museum of the
Paranormal.

Due to the uncanny or magical provenance of various of the relics, printed
materials, and handwritten manuscripts located in Newark, the most unique of
these special materials were left in their original location to be used only by
people with the strictest clearance. Other works and reference books, whose
origins were not so mysterious, were either reproduced in facsimile editions or
scanned into a special database and were now also collected in the Smithsonian
Institution’s ‘Trevor Broom’ pavilion.

The rest of Section 51 had been comprised of the offices and private quarters
of Trevor Broom and his closest associates. After the relocation to Washington,
Hellboy had all the locks on these replaced with ones that would only open at
the touch of his left palm. These rooms were then permanently sealed and he had
never entered them again; including the large cement room that had been his own
private quarters and the room he shared with Liz after their return from Moscow
in November of 2004.

During the decades of Trevor Broom’s tenure as director of the Bureau, his
office had been kept open at all times; since only personnel with clearance
could even get as far as its door. After his death, Hellboy had kept it that way
until the transfer to Washington. The office was now constantly locked, but
still utilized, at times, by specially designated personnel. One of Hellboy’s
excuses for this visit to Newark had been to check on the library and also to
arrange for the final sealing of Abe’s quarters, which were still keyed to open
at the now departed fish-man’s touch.

But that was not truly the real reason for the visit. Hellboy knew this, even
though he was reluctant to acknowledge the immense feeling of emptiness that had
driven him back to the location of his life together with Liz Sherman.

Palming the lock next to the library door, Hellboy pushed it open and looked
in.

“Hey, guys,” he said to the two research agents located there, “Much up?”

“Not too much, Boss.” Agent Barfield Owens grinned as he looked up from a
concealed computer terminal that did nothing to detract from the old fashioned
look of the office/library. “Just some weird stuff in ancient cemeteries in the
south of Mexico. Nothing much to be worried about yet, it seems.”

“Decapitated chickens involved again?” questioned Hellboy, looking over the
agent’s shoulder at the information on the screen.

“Nah, it seems unrelated to last year’s ‘chicken episodes’; but we’re keeping
track just to make sure.”

“Okay,” Hellboy straightened up as he grinned back at Agent Owens, “Keep up
the good work, Bart.”

Owens nodded, turning back to the information he had retrieved.

The other agent, Raphael Wilton, was the newest federal employee allocated to
the Bureau and had only met Hellboy a few times since he had first been
assigned. Consulting information on a hand-held data access terminal, he turned
as Hellboy finished addressing Agent Owens.

“Red, it looks like you’ve got another of these swamp monster thingies in
Louisiana again,” Wilton said as he looked closer at the gadget in his hand,
“Similar to the one that caused this Elizabeth Sherman so much trouble back in
1994.” Not seeing the frantic hand gestures with which Owens was silently trying
to get his attention, Wilton continued in an amused voice, “This Agent Sherman
seemed more like a ‘damsel in distress’ than a trained agent, if the file on
this case is anything to go by.”

Owens sighed in frustration as Hellboy moved closer to Wilton, slowly lashing
his tail back and forth. “You’re kinda new ’round here, Wilt,” Hellboy uttered
in a deceptively quiet tone, “so, I’ll forget all about it this once; but only
just this once.”

He suddenly reached out with his huge right hand and grabbed the hapless
agent up by the front of his dark BPRD-stamped uniform tee shirt. The hand-held
monitor clattered to the floor, as Wilton found himself nose-to-nose with a now
very angry demon; his feet barely touched the library carpet.

“But you say one more thing, Wilted Lettuce,” Hellboy growled louder, shaking
Wilton, “One more tiny, little thing, about my Lizzie and there won’t be enough
of you left for a funeral.”

Wilton staggered slightly, as Hellboy released him before turning and
stalking out of the office.

“Not one of your smarter moves, Rafe,” whispered Owens, “I know you’re a
rookie and a lot here is new to you—but I guess you didn’t look at enough of
Agent Sherman’s file to get who she was.”

Still shaken, Wilton shrugged, “Nope; just her involvement in that Louisiana
swamp monster case.”

Retrieving the fallen access terminal, Owens handed it back to Wilton. “Maybe
you’d better take another look at Elizabeth Sherman’s file, Rafe. It might be a
great idea to look at the whole thing; really very instructive, you know.”

He lowered his voice even further. “Let me clue you into some unspoken, but
very real Bureau rules—First, we never mention Elizabeth Sherman to the big, red
guy; never, not under any circumstances. Second, the same thing applies to
Trevor Broom. Maybe you could possibly get away with a little mention here and
there; but you had better make damn sure to steer clear of anything that could
sound the least bit disrespectful of his memory. Thirdly, I think it might be
good to add a new rule—No unnecessary talking about Abe Sapien. The big guy
doesn’t deal well with losses and he’s not really taking Abe’s departure all
that well.”

Wilton looked at the terminal in his hand again. “Maybe I’d better take this
back to my quarters and read up on certain Bureau personnel of the past. It’s
probably safer to be better informed.”

“Definitely safer, Rafe,” Owens said with a grin, as he turned back to the
information he was scanning.

Still clutching the data monitor in his hand, Wilton pulled open one of the
still-beautifully-carved golden oak doors to the library and started out into
the corridor beyond. As he set off to depart Section 51 in order to head for his
own quarters, he was interrupted by an unexpected voice.

“Hey, Wilton, wait up.” Wilton turned to face Hellboy, who had seemed to loom
up with little warning from a shadowed corner of the corridor.

Wilton assumed that Hellboy would have been long gone from Section 51 by
then. He clutched the data monitor even closer. “Um, Red, I, uh… I’m sorry, I
never meant…”

“Yeah, I know. Sorry, I overreacted.” To Wilton’s surprise, Hellboy smiled
slightly, “Keep me posted on what’s up in Louisiana and I’ll promise not to
shake your teeth out of your head the next time you report to me. Owens is
right; reading up on the old files is a good idea. In this job, a little
knowledge of the past can go a long way. Monsters often turn up for repeat
engagements.”

Turning away from Wilton, Hellboy continued down the corridor toward the
large metal door of his former quarters; a door that he hadn’t opened since he
had moved to Washington fifty years before.

He wondered if he was ready to face what he had locked behind that
door—memories that were pleading for him to release them and re-experience the
love contained within them. None of these memories held a more fearsome power
than his memories of his love for Elizabeth Sherman; and how, to his own
profound amazement, she had completely returned his love.

He stood for a long moment before unlocking the door. When he finally dragged
open the large door and passed through, some lights automatically flickered to
life. A brief examination of the room showed that the automatic cleaning and
ventilation system he had installed when first sealing the room had worked very
well.

After pulling the door closed after him, he walked over to the old red pickup
truck that he had used for so many years as a bed. Sitting on the mattress still
located in the back of the truck, he took a closer look at his former quarters.

Nothing had changed since he had last seen it. His old television sets were
still there. As most had been gifts from Trevor Broom, he never could bear to
discard them; even though most had become nonfunctional long before he stopped
using the room.

One wall of the room was covered with framed photographs of people who had
been important to Hellboy at one time. He himself was in very few of these; but
there was one of him as a young child with Trevor Broom, another of him with
Trevor Broom and a nineteen-year-old Liz, and the original of the digital
photograph shown to him the morning before by Trevor Carlton.

He closed his eyes, swearing the room still seemed filled with a faint scent
of flowers deriving from the natural cleansing agents Liz had preferred. As sat
breathing in a memory that he had spent almost a half a century running away
from, he felt a familiar sensation; a cat had just jumped into his lap.

Not having had any pets since he moved away from Newark, he should have been
surprised at this; yet, he was not surprised at all. First opening his eyes to
peer down at this intruder, he then gently stroked the brilliant white fur of
the larger-than-normal cat with his left hand. Closing its dazzlingly bright
blue eyes, the cat began to purr loudly.

After a long while of petting, Hellboy said in a low voice, “It’s been a
while, hasn’t it, Malachy?”

“Not since the flight back from Moscow in 2004,” came the answer. The voice,
though quiet, filled the entire room; it came from nowhere in particular, rather
than appearing to come directly from the cat.

Leaping down from Hellboy’s lap, the cat morphed into a tall, slender young
man. Hellboy had first met this eccentric incarnation of Michael the Archangel
in 1978. Rather than the long hair he had worn then, his radiantly white hair
was cropped short into the spiky look currently popular with the sophisticated
set. Now dressed in tight-fitting black jeans, midnight-blue tee shirt, and
original-style penny loafers, Malachy’s man-like appearance was a lot more solid
looking than in the past.

“Penny loafers?” Hellboy laughed, “Jeez, I haven’t seen those since the last
retro-fifties period.”

Malachy shrugged, “I suppose I could’ve picked up some sandals from ancient
Rome or old-style American cowboy boots, but that wouldn’t have fit the look I
was after.” Not liking what he sensed, Malachy looked closer at Hellboy. “And
here it’s Christmas Eve and you haven’t even hung up one single decoration. You
used to love to decorate. What’s up with you?

The grin that Hellboy had on his face faded. “I don’t need this crap. Why
don’t you just buzz off?”

Malachy had moved away toward a dark corner of the room. As he started to
pull out something large and flat, covered with a sheet, he glared back at
Hellboy, “Getting a little cheeky, aren’t you, big guy? I may have wings in some
of my many incarnations, but I don’t buzz; ever.”

Ignoring the humorous sarcasm, Hellboy’s face spasmed in anger as he noticed
what Malachy was hauling out from the corner. It was the odd ‘portrait’ that had
come to Hellboy on the Christmas Eve after his eightieth birthday. At the time,
he had cherished this mysterious canvas; convinced that in some strange way it
had been a gift from his then long-dead adoptive father, Trevor Broom.

Regardless of not being completely aware of its true origins, he knew he
could always look into its abstract swirls of color and see vivid images
of himself with loved ones who had passed on; especially the man who had raised
him. At one time, Hellboy would spend hours contemplating this fascinating
portrait. In doing so, he could still feel close to all the people he had lost
over the years.

“Put that damn thing back where you got it from,” he growled, “I haven’t
looked at it since Liz died and I won’t look at it now.”

Disregarding Hellboy’s anger, Malachy propped the large framed canvas against
Hellboy’s metal table and drew off the sheet covering it. In spite of himself,
Hellboy felt compelled to look at the painting he had not looked at in a
century. Expecting to again see the same images of himself with Liz that had so
grieved him on the day she died, he was taken aback that he saw nothing but
utter darkness.

When this portrait had first come to him, he had looked upon it as a magical
window on his past; maybe even a small glimpse of that heaven his adoptive
father had so believed in. What it now showed looked more like the deepest pits
of Hell—cold, bleak, despairing. Hellboy stood completely frozen in that moment
of sight, unable to move or speak.

“Ah, I was afraid of that,” Hellboy heard Malachy say, as he finally managed
to drag his gaze away from that horrifying darkness. He turned toward the being
that now appeared to be the only spot of brightness in his room. There was moment
of silence before Malachy asked an unexpected question.

“Do you remember your fifth birthday when Trevor Broom offered everything he
had to protect you; or the nurse who was almost as a mother to you; or the first
time you saw Abe Sapien; or the time you first made love to Kate Corrigan; or
the day you married Elizabeth Sherman? Do you really and truly remember them, or
do you merely remember that these things happened?”

“Of course, I remember them,” Hellboy instinctively started to say. He broke
off, gasping in dismay, “God, this is just so weird,” he moved closer to
Malachy, “What’s happening to me?”

Malachy shook his head. “Hellboy, you have been attempting to protect
yourself from the grief of losing those you love by suppressing your memories of
them and by refusing to ever love again. Remember this, love is from Heaven. You
can continue this process to its logical conclusion and lose that immortal soul
the man who raised you was so convinced you had. That will be the only outcome
of the path you are on now, for it is only in Hell that you can truly hide from
the power of love.”

Hellboy sighed, as he looked at the darkness his once cherished portrait had
become. “I know exactly what I want, but I’m not sure I have the strength to do
it.”

Malachy walked up behind Hellboy. “First, you will have to regain your past.
And, for you, the only way to regain it is to relive it.”

Malachy smiled, “No, probably not your whole past; but only you, deep down
inside, know which events of your life are the most important. I am aware you
have deep regrets for things that you wish you had done differently. You will
have a chance to rectify one and only one of these. Choose well; this choice
will not be permitted to change what happened, but it will change you and the
others around you. It will be quite interesting to see if this change will be
for the better or for the worse.”

Hellboy grunted, “Can’t think of anything that is worse than what I have now.
What do I need to do?”

Malachy made an arcane gesture and the portrait grew to enormous proportions.
It now looked like a huge doorway onto a dark and uncertain vista. “Just step
through and see where it leads you.”